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Diploma in Spoken Communication

Are your communication skills holding your career prospects hostage? College of Public Speaking World Online Speech Contest WOSC, UK Take a look at our Diploma in Spoken Communication

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For more news on the Corporate Challenge, our DVD, our new Fear of Public Speaking Retreat, Diploma in Public Speaking and all Scheduled Courses, please follow us on Twitter: twitter.com/vincestev

Location

Based in London, the College of Public Speaking offers its scheduled courses and workshops throughout central London, the south-east and across the UK. We cater for staff at all levels, whether it be for supervisors, managers, busy executives and right up to Board level. We also offer instruction for the effective delivery of technical material.

Trainers

Our lead trainers Michael Ronayne, Vince Stevenson, Richard Johnson and Alistair Divall have years of experience in the world of speaking and training across some of largest companies in the UK and abroad. We understand the issues involved in influencing people, whether it be senior management or the promotion board in accepting that you are ready for that next major challenge. We all belong to prestigious speakers clubs and regulary deliver speeches. We also participate in National Competitions and therefore ensure that we keep our skills up to date. We work as a cohesive team and support each other in delivering top quality courses and workshops.

Community

The College of Public Speaking also has strong links with the Community having run free workshops at Oxfam, Medicins sans Frontieres, Breast Cancer Care, Marie Curie Cancer Care, Cancer Research UK, The Rainbow Trust, Skoll Emerge Social Entrepreneurship - Oxford, Oxford Hub, Kings College London, Stephen Lawrence Trust, Minority Rights Group, 2Care Dementia Charity, Media Trust London, Addaction London, Bromley Field Study Centre and Gordon House, a residential home for people with a gambling addiction.

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The Trainer's First Impression

First impressions in any form of public communication are vital to the success of what follows.

Similarly, a trainer whose introduction to the session is slow, ponderous or unsure is setting up a low level of expectation and energy in the participants. This is difficult to alter. It is like a juggernaut set rolling in one direction that becomes incredibly difficult to divert into any other direction.

If the first few moments of a training session seem halting and insecure, sparks of dread shoot through each participant's head and connect with everybody across the room. An unspoken thought permeates the room amid fleeting snatches of eye-contact, 'This could be a long day. I am already bored and unsure and we have not even started yet'.

The problem is that once a trainer sets up those expectations it becomes very hard to undo them.

One may argue that if you start off slowly then you can steadily improve as you move on. However experience as a public speaker suggests that this is not the case. The introduction to a training session is a bit like a stage introduction to a speaker - it sets up a level of expectation.

Any of us speakers, at some point in our careers, will have had to endure a tame, limp introduction that leaves the audience thinking 'Yeh..and..?'.

It is very difficult to change that feeling once it has been set.

Sports trainers always emphasise how hard it is to change pace mid-match if the team or competitor has started off in a defensive frame of mind. So I would recommend that the opening of a training is regarded as a 'set piece' that should require a lot of consideration and attention.

If the opening comes across as clear, concise and controlled, psychologically the participants will settle back in the same way as a good friendly welcome over the intercom from an airline pilot makes the passengers relax and feel they will be in safe hands during the ensuing flight.

We should never forget that as a training session starts some of your participants may be arriving late or have just come from their offices or answered a text or phone call, so it is important that a good, solid, confident opening gathers their attention and helps them leave all their other issues outside the training room.

Therefore, the introduction should gather the participants together, give them a positive anticipation for what is coming next and give them a sense that they are about to embark on an interesting, valuable and worthwhile journey.

Your students' first impression will have an indelible quality.